Temperatures on the plains of Arafat soared toward 40°C (104°F) by late morning, but that was only a prelude. Pakistan's National Disaster Management Authority had issued a formal extreme heat advisory for the full Hajj period (May 25–29), warning that temperatures in Makkah could climb to 47°C (116.6°F) and in Madinah to 44°C (111.2°F) . The advisory highlighted the particular danger at Mount Arafat, an exposed, rocky hill that offers no natural shade and is considered by the Royal Commission for Makkah City and Holy Sites to be the highest-risk location on the highest-risk day of the pilgrimage
.
Saudi authorities responded with a large-scale mitigation effort. Volunteers lined the routes toward the mount, distributing bottled water, parasols, and food packages to the hundreds of thousands of pilgrims on foot . Medical teams were deployed along the route, and officials urged worshippers to stay hydrated, avoid direct sun exposure during the hottest hours, and seek medical attention at the first sign of heat distress
.
With the moon sighting confirmed on May 17, Saudi Arabia, the UAE, Oman, Qatar, Pakistan, Kuwait, Bahrain, Jordan, and a long list of other nations declared that Eid al-Adha would begin on Wednesday, May 27, 2026 (10 Dhul Hijjah 1447 AH) . The list extended across Southeast Asia—Indonesia, Malaysia, and Brunei had already announced their alignment with the Saudi sighting
. Several Western nations, including the United States, Canada, the United Kingdom, France, and Germany, also marked May 27 as the first day of Eid
.
India presented the most visible split. While the Muslim community in Kashmir followed the Saudi sighting and celebrated on May 27, the rest of India observed Eid al-Adha a day later, on May 28, adhering to the local moon sighting that lagged by 24 hours .
Indonesia once again sent the single largest group of international pilgrims. With an allocation of roughly 221,000 visas, the world's most populous Muslim nation accounted for nearly one in seven of all foreign Hajj pilgrims . Close behind, Pakistan fielded approximately 179,000–180,000 pilgrims, India sent around 175,000, and Bangladesh contributed roughly 127,000
. Together, these four South and Southeast Asian countries represented nearly half of the total international presence at Hajj 2026
. Nigeria rounded out the top five with about 95,000 pilgrims
.
No contingent faced a more complicated path to Mecca than Iran's. The US-Israeli military conflict with Iran, which escalated on February 28, 2026, immediately closed airspace and left Iranian Hajj organizers scrambling . Early in the year, Iranian pilgrims were forced to plan overland convoys through Iraq's Jadidat Arar border crossing—hundreds of pilgrims moving by bus across a third country because direct flights from Tehran were impossible
.
A ceasefire later restored limited air access, and Iran was ultimately allocated approximately 30,000 Hajj slots—just 34% of its official quota of 87,550 . The figure represented a reduction of nearly two-thirds from the roughly 90,000 Iranian pilgrims who attended in 2025
. Iranian pilgrims began arriving by air in late April, but the journey never lost its wartime character
.
The war's ripple effects extended far beyond Iran. Indonesia's government absorbed $107 million in additional airline expenses to shield its 221,000 pilgrims from price hikes caused by rerouted flights and higher aviation fuel costs . Pakistan and Malaysia also stepped in with government subsidies, while India added a $100 surcharge per pilgrim to offset the increased cost of aviation fuel
.
Unverified reporting from multiple outlets suggests that no official Hajj contingent from Gaza was able to participate this year. The ongoing war and blockade there rendered organized travel impossible. Palestinian pilgrims from the West Bank faced severe restrictions as well, though some were able to reach Saudi Arabia via Jordan. The sources reviewed for this article did not provide precise, confirmed numbers for Gaza pilgrims, but the reporting consensus points to a near-total exclusion .
Every major news report on Hajj 2026 noted the extraordinary geopolitical weight pressing on the pilgrimage. Headlines described worshippers praying at Mount Arafat "despite the shadow of war across the Middle East" . Saudi Arabia, in its role as the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, maintained a policy of not politicizing the Hajj—but the calculus was unavoidable. The kingdom hosted 30,000 Iranian nationals on its soil while Iranian-aligned forces continued to lay naval mines in the Strait of Hormuz and while a fragile ceasefire held without any formal extension mechanism
.
Multiple analyses noted that the Hajj itself had become a form of deterrence and constraint—a human gathering so large and so sacred that it limited military options for all parties . For the 1.5 million pilgrims on the plains of Arafat, however, the war was a distant if unsettling hum. Their focus remained on the ritual at hand: standing before God on the day of forgiveness, in the place where the Prophet Mohammed is believed to have delivered his final sermon.
Comments
0 comments